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© 2017. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.

Abstract

An initial survey of the twentieth and twenty-first century corpus yields in excess of one hundred poems which refer to humanitarian crises and human rights violations including poems about the Holocaust, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, the Bosnian War and the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In his comprehensive study, tellingly entitled Human Rights, Inc.: The World Novel, Narrative Form, and International Law (2007), Slaughter traces the rise of the Bildungsroman as a literary form which expounded a normative conception of the human individual and the development of human rights discourse emphasising a free and full human subjectivity, describing them as "mutually enabling fictions ... as each projects an image of the human personality that ratifies the other's idealistic vision" (4). The speaker of the poem acknowledges that the suffering of the young girl in the picture is of a different magnitude to that of his daughter; he considers the mediated nature of the representation of human rights violations, the uneven power relations between those directly affected and those who witness from a safe distance and he is troubled by his relatively privileged position as a voyeur, as one who has the liberty of interpreting this image in the context of his own experience and ideological position. Poems such as "Bunmhiotas na Murúch"/"Founding Myth" (CA 109; FMM 44-47) and "Miotas Bunaidh Eile"/"Another Founding Myth" (CA 110; FMM 4851) attest to their collective attempts to bring narrative order to their experience through acts of composition and story-telling while poems like "Na Murúcha ag Ní a gCeann"/"The Merfolk and Washing Hair" (CA 114; FMM 64-67), "Na Murúcha agus an Bainne Cíche"/"The Merfolk on Breastfeeding" (CA 107; FMM 40-43) and "Murúch Linbh gan Baisteadh"/"An Unbaptised Merchild" (CA 123; FMM 84-85) convey the extent to which traditional beliefs inherent in the oral tradition continue to shape the mermaids' understanding of reality, especially at those threshold or liminal points in life such as childbearing, baptism, marriage or death.

Details

Title
Of Mermaids and Changelings: Human Rights, Folklore and Contemporary Irish Language Poetry
Author
Fhrighil, Rióna Ní 1 

 NUI Galway, Ireland 
Pages
107-121
Publication year
2017
Publication date
2017
Publisher
Dra. Rosa Gonzalez on behalf of AEDEI
e-ISSN
1699311X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2116437437
Copyright
© 2017. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.